ORDER
Mark Brant filed a complaint under 42 U.S.C. § 1983 against two Freeport, Illinois police officers, contending that they used excessive force when they arrested him and took him into custody. Brant, a paraplegic, alleged that he experienced back spasms as the two officers forcibly “corkscrewed” him into a police car, causing his back to slam into the door frame of the car. As a result, Brant claimed that he suffered pain and lower back injuries. The district court granted summary judgment to the officers, concluding that the officers did not use an objectively unreasonable amount of force during the arrest and that they were entitled to qualified immunity. We affirm.
The facts as agreed to by the parties show that in the evening of May 8, 1998, Freeport police officers Brian Fred Cass and Wendell McClain stopped Brant while he was driving a three-wheel motor scooter erratically and with his headlights and taillights turned off. After the officers stopped Brant, they requested his driver’s license, but he was able to produce only a Department of Corrections inmate ID card. Officer Cass performed a background check, which revealed that Brant’s license was revoked and that he was operating the motor scooter with no license plate, title, or registration. According to Brant, Officer Cass drew his weapon and told Brant to put his hands on the scooter’s handlebars; the officers, however, dispute that Cass drew his weapon. Officer Cass then told Brant that he was under arrest for driving after revocation of his license. At this time, Freeport police officer Don Heath arrived as backup in response to Officer Cass’s radio report of the traffic stop. Officer Cass then handcuffed Brant’s wrists after placing his arms behind his back while he remained seated on the scooter. He then conducted a pat-down search of Brant which Officers McClain and Heath observed. During the search, Officer Cass discovered cannabis, a cannabis smoking device, a wooden box, and a drug scale.
After completing the arrest, the officers discussed whether they should drive Brant to the county jail themselves or call an ambulance, given that Brant is paraplegic. Officer Cass contacted his supervisor, Sgt. Brian Kuntzelman, who indicated that the Freeport police had no established policy regarding the arrest of paraplegic individuals. Sgt. Kuntzelman recalled, however, that on one prior occasion, Freeport police officers had transported a paraplegic suspect to the county jail in the back seat of a police ear and he advised Officer Cass to do the same.
The parties disagree about what happened next. According to Officers Cass and McClain, they lifted Brant and carried him in a sitting position five to ten feet
The district court granted summary judgment to the defendants, and concluded that no evidence existed to show that Officers Cass and McClain used an objectively unreasonable amount of force to arrest Brant. The court specifically found that, given the fact that Brant was handcuffed and did not have the use of his legs, some amount of force was legitimately necessary to place Brant’s body into the police car. Alternatively, the district court held that Brant’s lawsuit against the officers was barred by qualified immunity, because he was unable to show that the officers violated any of his clearly established rights.
On appeal Brant argues that the district court erred in finding that Officers Cass and McClain used objectively reasonable force by twisting his body into the police car while effectuating the arrest. We review a grant of summary judgment de novo, construing the facts in the light most favorable to Brant. See Fed.R.Civ.P. 56(c); Hardy v. Univ. of Ill. at Chicago,
Brant argues that the district court incorrectly found the officers’ use of force to be reasonable, because the court failed to consider the minor nature of his violations, his paraplegia, and the absence of resistance to arrest. But a review of each of the Graham factors, under the facts as described by Brant, leads to the conclusion that the officers acted reasonably as a matter of law. First, Brant never contends that the officers were not authorized to take him into custody because of his offenses. Brant’s violations involved erratic driving without a license or registration, as well as possession of a controlled substance and drug paraphernalia, which, contrary to Brant’s characterization of the facts as a minor traffic stop, gave the officers probable cause to arrest him. See United States v. Schaafsma,
Given the fact that Brant’s arrest was justified, the officers’ tactics in placing Brant in the police car may have been clumsy or imprudent, but they were not objectively unreasonable. See California v. Hodari D.,
In any event Brant can point to nothing in the record to show that Officers Cass and McClain exercised any more force than necessary to place him into the police car during his arrest. Brant appears to argue that because the officers were aware of his paraplegia, they should have used alternative means to effectuate his arrest. But we have held that officers may use limited force to detain disabled or non-responsive suspects in other similar cases. See Smith,
Finally, even if we were to conclude that the record left remaining questions of fact as to the reasonableness of the officers’ use of force, we would agree with the district court that the officers are entitled to qualified immunity. The officers are shielded from liability for their official acts, unless they violate a clearly established constitutional right. See Saucier v. Katz,
AFFIRMED.
